If you are a Redneck Christnik, Sarah will drop to her knees and suck your balls. Why Sarah and Putin see Jesus as a kick-ass brute, who hates homos, is proof these two are psychotic.
Quite frankly, it looks like that bearish Russian, is drilling Prince Putin for oil.
“Come to Papa Bear my little prince!”
Putin’s biker bitch – sucks for oil!
Jon
Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin says that Russian President Vladimir Putin is a man known for wrestling bears while President Barack Obama is known for wearing mom jeans.
“People are looking at Putin as one who wrestles bears and drills for oil,” Palin said to Fox News’s Sean Hannity on Monday night. “They look at our president as one who wears mom jeans and equivocates and bloviates.”
Palin’s comments came just days after Obama was photographed in the Oval Office sporting denim during a 90-minute phone call with Putin.
(PHOTOS: Ukraine turmoil)
America is not a country that the rest of the world wants to emulate “because of Obama’s weak leadership, leading from behind,” Palin said. Other countries are taking advantage of America’s weakness, she added, caused by Obama’s failure to understand “peace through strength.”
“Anybody who carries the common-sense gene knows that Putin doesn’t change his stripes.”
Palin said not only did she correctly predict in 2008 that Russia would move into Ukraine, but she is right about the connection between energy and prosperity. Those countries like Russia that develop their natural resources can strengthen their military and influence in the world, she said, insisting that America needs to move forward on the Keystone XL pipeline.
Reblogged this on rosamondpress and commented:
Sarah Palin also praised Putin over Obama. ““People are looking at Putin as one who wrestles bears and drills for oil,” Palin said to Fox News’s Sean Hannity on Monday night. “They look at our president as one who wears mom jeans and equivocates and bloviates.”
One of the themes of the vice presidential debate in Farmville, Va., involved Tim Kaine pressing Mike Pence on controversial statements made by either Pence or Donald Trump.
Kaine, a Democratic U.S. senator from Virginia, tried particularly hard to pin his rival down on favorable statements about Russian leader Vladimir Putin.
At one point, Kaine said, “Hillary also has the ability to stand up to Russia in a way that this ticket does not. Donald Trump, again and again, has praised Vladimir Putin. … Gov. Pence made the odd claim — he said, inarguably, Vladimir Putin is a better leader than President Obama. Vladimir Putin has run his economy into the ground. He persecutes LGBT folks and journalists. If you don’t know the difference between dictatorship and leadership, then you got to go back to a fifth-grade civics class.”
Kaine hammered the point again later in the debate.
“Well, this is one where we can just kind of go to the tape on it. But Gov. Pence said, inarguably, Vladimir Putin is a better leader than President Obama.”
Pence, the governor of Indiana, pounced, saying, “That is absolutely inaccurate. … He said he’s stronger — he’s been stronger on the world stage.”
So who was right? A close look at the original comment suggests that both have a point, but neither is fully accurate.
Understanding this claim requires going back to exchanges that occurred about a month earlier.
On several occasions during the campaign, Trump had spoken admiringly of Putin. For instance, in NBC’s Commander in Chief Forum on Sept. 7, Trump said, “The man has very strong control over a country. It’s a very different system and I don’t happen to like the system, but certainly, in that system, he’s been a leader, far more than our president has been a leader.”
The following day, Pence was asked about Trump’s remark in an interview with CNN’s Dana Bash at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. Pence supported what his ticket-mate had said.
“I think it’s inarguable that Vladimir Putin has been a stronger leader in his country than Barack Obama has been in this country,” Pence said. “And that’s going to change the day that Donald Trump becomes president.”
So Kaine has a point that Pence did say something seemingly favorable to Putin’s leadership, saying he’d been “a stronger leader” than Obama. But Kaine related the remark inaccurately, saying Pence had said Putin was “a better leader than President Obama.” Pence never used the term “better.”
As it turns out, Trump himself had used the word “better,” at least twice. During a July 27 news conference in Florida, Trump said, “Putin has much better leadership qualities than Obama, but who doesn’t know that?” And on the July 28 edition of Fox & Friends, Trump did say Putin is “a better leader than Obama.”
But during the debate, Kaine didn’t say Trump said these things. He said Pence did.
Meanwhile, Pence’s response to Kaine’s jab wasn’t airtight, either.
First, Pence’s counterpunch seemed to conflate his own comments on Putin with Trump’s. And second, Trump was never explicit that he was referring to Putin’s role on the “world stage.”
Our ruling
In the debate, Kaine said that Pence had “said, inarguably, Vladimir Putin is a better leader than President Obama.”
Pence did say something very similar — but not exactly as Kaine said. Pence had said that Putin “has been a stronger leader in his country than Barack Obama has been in this country.” However, “stronger” is not identical to “better.” We rate the statement Mostly True.